9 Burst results for "Twenty-Five Thousand Feet"

WTOP
"twenty-five thousand feet" Discussed on WTOP
"Pay attention to every little detail the ones who fuss tinker and sweat the small stuff because you know the tiniest thing can make the biggest difference when it comes to keeping business moving we get it we're the same way offering access to product experts to help you quickly and easily find what you need so whatever your industry you know you're always getting professional grade products call click granger .com or just stop by granger friday morning on wtob 28 traffic and weather on the eights back to rick mcclure in the traffic center looks like the volume is starting to get heavier on the envelope mark through college park with the work zone set up at route one underneath the pass there that could be affecting the merge lanes along both loops from route one to the beltway ramps so we're checking on the work zone on the outer loop as well so both loops right now could be affected with that work zone underneath route one the overpass maryland near i -272 and from frederick you're good i -95 maryland size still with a couple of issues slowing things down a bit headed north through parts of columbia and elkridge the first near route 32 is a work zone along the left side and then we have the crash cleanup northbound near route 100 and that's along the left side as well bw parkway good you're through prince george's and howard counties route 52 and from the bay bridge still at speed three lanes west and two lanes east the crash investigation down in huesville continues closing old littertown road both ways between burnstorm road and route five and we're checking on tire debris affecting the southbound lanes of route 14 after modder avenue up in frederick at last check was along the right side be careful over in virginia 66 395 395 no issues reported i -95 with volume slowdowns south parts of newington and lorton toward the aquaquon no issues reported along that stretch in both stretches looking good along the northbound side and through the district i -395 north or the eastbound watch freeway for the crash in the third street tunnel at last check was in the right lane of the mains now leasing the wellness center at west west falls a new state -of -the -art one hundred and twenty five thousand foot square foot medical office building in falls church lease today at two oh two four six three twenty one hundred rick mcclure w t l p traffic the seven news first alert forecast heading into a stormy weekend with eileen whelan sunshine this morning will give way to cloudy skies this afternoon a high today of seventy five it also will

Airline Pilot Guy - Aviation Podcast
"twenty-five thousand feet" Discussed on Airline Pilot Guy - Aviation Podcast
"Waves which can cause violent temporary loss of control until the intake is restarted. The extreme you're enrolling forces of isometric pirate mac three be so destabilizing to the that a built in system would immediately unstamped the intake of the engine. The engine explosion had shot off the across generators causing the cabin deludes prussia and triggering the full inflation of both pilots precious suits making it hard to move around and keep the aircraft under control. They took the blackbird down descending ten miles in height to around twenty five thousand feet but the emergency wasn't the only reason that they were in a die situation in the post the soviet authorities had intercepted and shot down. Usa craft engaged in intelligence gathering on. They had specifically station may twenty-five fox pets from the seven hundred eighty seven. Th fighter aviation. Regiment of finale evolved in the german democratic republic for the sole purpose of attempting to indicent the baltic express missions as the cripple blackbird slowed and descended. It would be easy. Prey for the fox. Pats nolan veltri. Knew that they are in serious trouble. And they decided to head towards the baltic island of gotland swedish territory where they might land or eject. They knew that they were going to get better treatment. From the swedes. Than the soviets they also switched on that transponder putting out an emergency skulk making the stealthy aircraft easy to see on radar tree considered it. The best thing he did that day. Come on he thought we fooling at this point and he hoped that the cavalry would come all the bad guys about forty miles east of southern oceans. The american crew saw two dolts approaching from the east and they decided that if they saw missile coming off the rails of the pursuing jets. They point the news down in a checked. As adults got closer. They realize these ones soviet jets but the distinctive plan form of vegan fighters in the vegan. Cockpits the pilots wont the blank. Bird emerge from a misty sky. And they could see. They were in distress flying low and slow. It was obvious that the aircraft was on only one engine and then things got really dicey a russian make twenty five folks but pulled alongside the vegans veltri learned later that the national security agency. I've concluded the russian plane was under orders to false to land or shoot them down. But the presence of the swedish fighters deterred the make and after a few minutes peeled off and departed the area. However the nsa later informed them that at least twenty soviet aircraft were launched as they continue their journey. Possibly you ania poland and east germany. As the first two. Vegans ran short of fuel. They were replaced by another path from that quick reaction lip flight which continue to ensure the american aircraft safety. They stayed with the blackbird until they were relieved by american f. fifteens from west germany. The kept them safe until the craft could land nordholz airbase in denmark where it made us safer covering such was the secrecy surrounding these missions. That details only revealed recently. When at a ceremony held in stockholm. All swedish pilots our time web presented with the united states and awarded for single acts of heroism or meritorious achievement while participating in aerial flight. The american pilot left unin. Colonel said of the incident. Your obvious skills and judgment were definitely demonstrated on that faithful day many years ago. I want to thank you for your actions on that day. We will never know what would or could have happened. But because of you there was no international incident. The us air force did not lose an irreplaceable aircraft into crew members. Lives were saved lieutenant. Colonel veltri and i can't thank you sufficiently for what you prevented. Thank you for being highly skilled and dedicated patriotic fellow aviators.

The Tony Kornheiser Show
"twenty-five thousand feet" Discussed on The Tony Kornheiser Show
"The tony kornheiser. Show sent to us by. Michael mullins take is hopes all is well. We've been working on a bunch of new stuff but it just now putting out the songs that you guys kindly took two and featured on the show a couple of weeks back we have one more for you. Call the wife. It's now available now everywhere. I thought i'd like to make you guys aware of it and share it. This is the ban is called zita. That's why z. I. t. as zita. That's what hardcore rock and roll dan right rock and roll band. So if you are zita. Or what was the band from rough ideas. I think rough ideas from richmond. Virginia you want to send us your original music michael. How do you do that and music. By emailing to jingles at tony conan's show dot com. We love the original music because we can't afford the other music we love the orgin. Abby lowell the smartest man in washington joins us now because two things of bubbled up in the last seventy two hours. Maybe a little bit more than that that involve athletes of tremendous consequence one and olympic sprinter and won the highest one year. Deal ever for a pitcher. I believe so the she carry richardson. a lot to be the favourite in one hundred meters in the olympics in tokyo. And trevor bauer is a big deal pitcher one these reigning cy young award winner in the national league and they are in a certain amount of trouble in terms of being able to pursue their craft. And we'll start. What you carry richardson she has been popped for using marijuana probably not to use it for any competitive advantage because it's sorta hard to believe it gives you a competitive advantage. She had already qualified for the olympics. As a sprinter she used it. She has said i did it. I knew the rule. I did it abby. A lot of people say that it's a bad rule but until you change the rule it is the rule. How do you look at her circumstance. Because she's accepted a one month suspension. That will keep her out of the individual races but may allow her to be on the relay races in tokyo so this is the complexity of having four different bodies of law and rules. Right you have yes The united states law. When you're in the united states you have a state law and for example on marijuana. There's not all fifty states that have the same you have the. Us olympic rules and you have the international was and the problem is. It's not wrong. In some theoretical way to have an athletic organization make rules that are different than what the law that non athletes us right. I mean you can all say yeah. That kind of makes sense. The problem is. How old are those rules. And who made them to begin with and do they carry with them. Sort of an archaic view of what the rules should be an and in terms of some of these rules. Who made them is like. Was it a bunch of like eleven white guys. Twenty five years ago making rules that are still in effect and so the problem is where is the line and in you're right i mean take take her. For example you know the rule says drugs can disqualify you want it's performance enhancing and another one is something. And then the third is like a you know cast aspersions on your sport or something like that. Well to begin with you're right. You know. Think about it i. I don't know this from first hand but my understanding of people who use marijuana is that it's not only not enhancing think about it like if she did it she probably wanted to go out and get fried food and donuts and it wasn't gonna make a run very fast so you know. I think one of the questions that people ask is well wait. Why does that make sense for rule. That doesn't conform on the other hand. You know sometimes. We want these athletics to have rules. Like i mean you know i. I don't know what would come to mind. But i mean think of tennis. For example i mean everybody can wear anything except the wimbledon where you can only wear white and when like rafa decided he would take his sleeves off that was probably the scandal of the united kingdom. So consequently there's the tension and let me show you where it goes before we get to the next example. I my partner in my firm has represented athletes against the ncaa in in the issues of whether you can you know they can raise funds or make funds for their name and likeness and whether they can have funds attributed to them so the rules make sense when you think about them at twenty five thousand feet but their archaic like the ncaa rules are and then they change but they change slowly. So for her for kerry. Richardson is it. Is it fair. People will come out on both sides of that issue and it does seem to me that when there is a rule that isn't connected immediately to performance and it doesn't have the immediate effect of it being something as vague as does it cast some aspersion the sports. That's where it gets tricky and that's where people should reconsider. Yeah so we have a situation where there there's reportedly An incident in her life that caused her great distress. The death of a loved one and then. She sought refuge for that for that pain by using marijuana. She has an. I can't stress this enough. She says i did this. I knew the rule. I did this. I accept the punishment what i'm asking now and i. I suspect i know the answer. But i think people would ask this the law. I mean does does she have legal recourse as we understand the law the law being written to affect the entire citizenry. You know the law of the land which is different than the law of athletics. Different than the law of the olympics certainly the international olympic committee. If she can she go to a court in the united states. I suspect she can't but i'm asking. Can she go to court in the united states and say. Get me relief from this. Well you know you. Just define as i started the conversation at various levels of law and rules the law can say something is okay to do but you as a club member as somebody who lives in a homeowners association as somebody who signs up to be an athlete for the olympic team sign agreement contract of you know orally or in writing that says i will abide by your rules which are more restrictive ryan the law of the state or the country and so the answer to your question straight on his no The other issue there is an here shows. The potential arbitrariness of the system is that so. She says i did it. It's not performance enhancing. She understands that she was doing something which she admits she knew was wrong. But they will be the the arbitrariness of like all right four weeks. Why not two weeks. Why not one week. Why not a reprimand. Don't do it again. And they are again lies the problem with rules that are not basically in hard concrete in in various laws because laws you know we do basically try to set out the parameters of the punishment here when you have institutions deciding what will be the punishment is it includes another level of potential arbitrariness. And so she could have for this offense for the reason she did. It admitted say she did it. But the institution the organization could have said okay. This is your first defense. You know we give people a second bite at the apple and it could have been a reprimand. You know what i mean. So there's another level it's not just broke the law or rule not law but rule rule. What happened what what happens with it. But she doesn't have any recourse in court if she kinda voluntarily decided to abide by more restrictive rules one more point on that in our history and you see it now like with voting rights right. The united states federal government can say thou shall have the right to vote And the states can say yes but i want you to show an idea. I want you to stand on your head and sing the star spangled banner and so when you start delegating how a law is interpreted or how a rule is interpreted you end up with this possibility that we all abide by on some level but olympic organizations clubs homeowner associations and states can do something with it that makes it more restrictive and at some point it does get to if it does violate a bigger law. It's due process. You know if it's equal protection. If for example i mean look at one of the other issues going on right on the swimming team. There's some weird rule being imposed that you can't wear certain Bathing cap which basically people of color used based on different hairstyles. That's where you start worrying about whether the rules do basically conflict with something that's bigger and broader like you know equal protection due process..

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"twenty-five thousand feet" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"I saw rick tidwell at the laundromat last night and i was heloc checking him out. I just kept staring at him and he played like i wasn't even there. I be like that then all right enough of that. Welcome back to this. Show rectal with you. Coast to coast and around the world on the american forces radio network. It's our pleasure to walk into. This show matias zeroed. And he's here to talk about The movie about him called super frenchie. And it's going to be released in virtual cinemas and video on demand on Friday he is a ski base. Jumper from labelle fronts. Matias i know you were born in normandy. So when did you get down to the mountains. When did you start getting into all that. It was so my parents had a vacation home in the mountains So that's how we you know we'd go there. It was really a family owned we lived in normandy would spend every every holiday in the mountains winter or summer right and so. That's kind of how. I i to the medicine wheel and then later on the france that we were closer to the mountains so go there every weekend. Then they push ahead. You sail their their home because they couldn't afford it anymore but by then got picked up by Academy program through the public school system in the else and i just became a mouth in kid by adoption by birth but as a northern california guy. I would ski at Tahoe i never had money to go to vail or aspen or banff or anything like that but for you at was a sasha. They by what was that like having done is beautiful. Little You know mountain town right in front of all of mobile. You know a lot of people. When they think of more blended highest peak in western europe they they go to chamonix technically a little closer but technically the summit of more as part of the town of javale. And so you. You looking The whole West base of the mountain range. And so it's you can't escape it you know. The town is at three thousand thirty five hundred feet. Roughly about a thousand meters fifteen hundred and then the summit goes all the way to almost sixteen thousand. So you have these towering magnificent mountain where you look. It's just it's just bear reminding you of your place you are right and speaking of mom block or as we call it the matterhorn you ten years ago jumped off it. Could you tell that kind of got everything going right before that. I did the idea. Actually i curse sanction. Yeah yeah. I completed the trilogy ski beach. Something of a metal horn animal and The i wasn't the first one ski base. Jump off with four guys to do it and so it was kind of like falling the footsteps of heroes fiction conti and jt oems and jarring giveaway. Who's a french ebay jumper and Who inspired chain. And then after the eiger. Oh wow i gotta go. I gotta do the the matterhorn. That's the next logical progression matterhorn. It it worked but it was a really close call. I hit a rough ride before jumping into the north face. It's kinda outta control card willing to the north face but it's still able to put my parachute safety inside down the valley and then after this You know it took me about eight years to finally get the the jump from the summit of as well. So you know when you get into that kind of sporty ends up being a studio cook asian and it's It's a never ending journey. Y'all have things on you this right. Because it's their type of thing and let the people who don't know base is an acronym it stands for buildings antenna spans and earth or cliffs and correct me. If i'm wrong you only carry one parachute right. Yeah you don't have a back. He's only one parachute and so you you pack it like a reserve emergency parachute when you jump off a cliff. We're building if something goes wrong with your your parachute. You wouldn't have time to deploy a backup airship anyway so you only have one has to be perfect and then tell us about the wing suit because that looks so much fun but it also looks terrifying. I always wonder. How do you land in the wing suit wing. You jump off and you fly as she you know. It's not too hard. You can't look what you want to go and you just say there and then once you get The minimum altitude. That you go. I mean lower altitude and you. She could be pro your parachutes and then you can then take the flying parachutes but i i do enjoy. You know i might have a couple of hundred jumps with it but Ski base jumping. I think i prefer it It's really more my craft in what i really enjoy doing That guy lifetime links you but ski base jumping has. It's actually a lot more dangerous than we'd seen. Because you have a lot more variables. But i guess both boys you can make that you want him to be a whether you know. How are you gonna put the question. Mark more questions for zero super frenchie. Coming out friday when i look at You know a couple of years ago. Is it lukens from twenty-five thousand feet. He you know he's on oxygen and he's off oxygen and he just basically lands in a net. Is that something. That intrigues you. Or did you think that was insane. I know i know. Luke personally actually have jumped at him. Several times His drug that. You are way i did. And i knew he had it he's He's a very skilled professional and he really put all the pieces of the puzzle together. One step at a time. So i knew that you know he. He didn't just jump out of a plane right. You know right away lane and the nets. He did some some some actress. Guide and opening lower lower tried to target on how to get to net and had all these all these impairment paramaters in ducks in a row. And so he was able to do it flawlessly. And yeah i I was definitely Anxious watching the videos because there's no margin for error right. But i knew he had it under control and and that's the thing you know. It's not not as slammed on its If the journey you have to you have to prepare yourself for years and what you to do things correctly. Otherwise you may not survive. I've had travis pastrana on the show. Of course he is mostly known for his tricks on his Dirt bike but he added thing where he jumped out of a plane with. No shoot and you know big smile on his face doing some twists and turns and then like whatever halfway down somebody handed him a shoot which looks terrifying but for him. He's a thrill seeker. Which you call yourself a thrill seekers that just too simplistic now competing because again. I'm not as a here of drilling junkie. I'm no daredevil. I accept the risk. The risk is variable and my existential quest. Yeah so. I think when i was in high school i saw that bond movie the spy who loved me. And he's in that ski chase and then he goes over the cliff and the union. Jack parachute deploys. That was the first time. I saw anything like that. Same.

The Ladies of Strange
"twenty-five thousand feet" Discussed on The Ladies of Strange
"Wow that could you imagine how bad your ears would pop liza. Their worries tiffany. Do thousand twelve james cameron. Hey yeah the famous film. Drek filmmaker explored roughly the same depth on a sold low mission. Oh that bothered me and those in does even bother me that much but being alone in a scoop for i. Guess it's not technically it's a sub. It is a submarine but it has a special name to go that deep But then in two thousand. Nineteen victor vis gov made history by becoming the first person to so far reached the deepest part of the ocean at thirty six thousand seventy feet so that deep. The pressure from the water is approximately eight tonnes over square inch. Jets alive why. Why would you do that. How does it survive physics. That's how not much does. I will send you a link to the article. That i found a lot of information and i think in two thousand and twelve was the first picture that they were able to get. I don't remember the details. It was passed a certain depth. The first picture of a living creature. And it's just a little fish. It's not anything to terrifying tiffany. Just it's okay. It's a fish and it was on a say at like twenty five thousand feet or something like that so but it wasn't doing great for the record listeners. Longtime listeners will no new time might not but we judge how uncomfortable tiffany is by how much she folds and on herself. And one of the downsides of recording remotely is. We don't get to watch that happen. So tiffany oh how folded into yourself argue right now. My camera is turning on for you ladies. Oh she's a ball. Oh yep. I'm a ball knees for boobs. Newspapers i have white knuckled my legs right now. She's very pale. And like when i'm not talking my head is down like this. I turned into a turtle. It's bad Well just you know putting it out there. Like i said taking picture the first fish. Just what two thousand twelve dot us about the say. Well no that would be right nine years ago. So as we know the size of the ocean water pressure kind of limit. Our exploration of the ocean little bit. So it's concluded that we've only identified about one third of potential marine life. The it's believed that most of these creatures are smaller organisms. But it is likely that there's some larger ones that have yet been discovered that are either endangered or just so well hidden that we haven't seen them but we're making progress. An average of two thousand new species are discovered each year. How jesus so stay tuned. You never know what you'll wine by catholic benchley in which case twenty twenty in two thousand twenty one would be explained but i think that ca- through would have already made himself themselves. I don't know if not they're like you guys fucked up enough. I'm going to nap for another hundred years. I wanna sit back here. I got this. I'm await so those my very brief. Let's see if i can make tiffany uncomfortable. Factoid of z ocean. You've did a great job. I'm so proud of you. Stay tuned there's more coming. I don't like that. How about we not do that. Okay can i go next do it. Well in a tiffany said hers wasn't too scary. So yeah we'll do it in the end scary stuff done and then tiffany. Ken like bring yourself back to that. Nice little world. She has in her head before she goes to bed..

Scientific Sense
"twenty-five thousand feet" Discussed on Scientific Sense
"Go ahead. It's also cheap labor and cheap labor to be a graduate student. You know you have to you have to be able to Solder and live off of a you know a fairly low stipend but It's it. It's also really useful for testing new technologies for nasa for spaceflight. So this was one of the the main sort of tests for Connecticut inducted detectors as technology to be used on future space missions and in that it was very successful because we launched we got to float we made some observations. We measured the detector response and the response of the electron. Ix and everything was working well and so that counts as nasa says check. This technology has been tested and is now suitable to be proposed to fly on a space mission unfortunately on launch. We had an incident where there's a caller that holds the balloon when they launch it that that is released after launch and usually. That's fine but I guess one out of every between twenty and one hundred launches the collar when it falls a hits the payload who'd and that's what happened to us it. It hit the payload and then about ten hours after we arrived. We got to our altitude up to thirty five kilometers. A piece that had been damaged presumably In that Launch a piece structural piece broke and we were no longer able to point the telescope so We only got about ten or twelve hours of data instead of three weeks hoping for i would imagine. Fill out this is a very large balloon is a helium balloon. That goes all up to what heights. Yeah so about thirty five kilometers height so an airplane is flying like seven or eight kilometers. The the yes about one hundred and twenty five thousand feet I guess though about ten times you know a typical sort of tall mountain right Higher and It's not quite in space but At that at that height the sky even when the sun is up is is completely black Very little atmosphere. As i said there's is about three mil- bars it's it's a slim similar to or maybe slightly more than a slightly less than the atmospheric pressure on the surface of mars So it's a it's enough in space that you can basically do a lot of astronomy that you would normally need to be in orbit to do but you can do More cheaply from the balloon and But as i said it's it's also a riskier. I think than Than the normal launches of of satellite telecoms. So so that the mission that you've flew you got some data you see here. polarized thermal emission from interstellar dust revealing magnetic field structures in nearby giant monitor clouds of debris actually get some data from the mission that that flew up me. We did we. We scanned across We did some scans on the sky when we were still able to two point and we detected in while you can see it while we were there and since we've been working on doing more detailed map reconstruction of the of the data After the flying. So we have some sources that we've measured We've also got from a previous flight. Where we we measured some sources And magnetic fields Or polarized estimation and then inferred information about magnetic fields in star forming regions. We obviously didn't get as much data as as we wanted to..

Weird AF News
"twenty-five thousand feet" Discussed on Weird AF News
"Introducing flights to know where maybe and people might pay for this. I don't know how let's get into the article. Singapore airlines is said to be a new route next month. The media is calling it a flight to know. Where does that work. Well flights take off and they land from the same place. We is that a good time for people in this case. It's going to be singapore's chang Airport which is probably the best and fanciest airport in the world. I've been there a few times. I will never forget the first time. I was in a bathroom in the singapore airport. Just it blew me away absolutely blew me away. It was the cleanest most modern bathroom. I had ever been in in my life up until that point since then i've experienced some More advanced toilets in places like taiwan and japan. But i'll never forget that. I chang Airport bathroom experience. When i landed my first time in asia. It's like wow. This is unbelievable now. Although the media is saying that these flights could occur early as as early as next month. Singapore airlines has not confirmed. The flights said that none of these plans have actually been firmed up But if it does debut destination free flying it will not be the only carrier in asia. That's doing it. Such flights can be seen as a way to help the embattled national carrier of singapore cope during a year of record losses by the covid nineteen while also allowing residents of the small nation. A chance to leave the island if only for a few hours. That's just such a lame way to leave the island. Take a kayak see some birds and whatnot wildlife. Why would you just go up in a plane and come back down. What do you like the food or i do like them. Pretzels singapore airline which is routinely ranked among the world's best Has been hit hard by the pandemic since it does not operate domestic flights. Yes most of singapore's five point. Seven million residents have been unable to travel since singapore's shut. Its borders late. March australian lethal francis. Who has lived. In singapore since two thousand one is interested in these no destination flights if they do become a reality. I think it's a great idea. Would be willing to go of. Singapore airlines goes ahead with the idea. Seaboards in island. And i'm used to traveling. So i definitely miss flying. I know do you miss flying so much. Serve that you'll pay two hundred dollars to fly up and then come right back down. Is that you enjoy this much sir. I think you're weird singaporean. Susanna lo said she would pay for a ticket if the amount is reasonable. I would pay mainly because. I miss traveling. I miss it. And you know the whole process of checking and the the airplane food and of course the flight attendants warmth and smiles ho. You you really love checking in susanna. Is that what you're into. It's a good time for you checking in going through that security. It's a good airplane food. That's a good time for you. The warmth of the flight attendants who just hate your guts susannah. I hate to break the news media susannah. They hate your guts. Okay there smiling. Because they're paid to smile aka. It's not genuine warmth okay. I mentioned earlier. How other countries are offering this similar service in late. August japanese carrier all nippon airways flew a ninety minutes scenic flight One of its flying ho new airbus. A three eighty aircraft's passengers. Were treated to a hawaiian resort style. Experience in the airport and on board the plane which normally flies between tokyo and honolulu. But this one didn't go to honolulu and came back down and then they got off. They were met with a bunch of people going. Aloha aloha just to pretend that you arrived in hawaii. Is that what i'd imagine. Taiwanese air carrier. Eva air launched a sightseeing flight. Last month on one of its. Hello kitty jets departing from and landing at taipei's tau on international airport. The hour forty five minute flight. Travelled at an altitude of twenty to twenty five thousand feet to give passengers a closer view of taiwan and japan's real q. Islands hope i said these places. Right taiwan's national carrier. China airlines flew two flights that took off and landed in taipei in august and the representative from china air told the news that the initiative has received a positive response from the local market. Apparently people love to go up and down. I guess that's that's the think people pay for this so surprised. I didn't realize people enjoyed flying this much. I can't stand it personally. I don't like the food very much. I don't like checking in The whole experience to me is just lame. I i hate to pay for such things. I certainly wouldn't pay to go nowhere. It's something i put up with. When i got to travel i'd say okay. I'll put up with this crap. I don't go how this is just such a good time. The flight itself was better than the actual vacation. Do you guys feel this way would would take such a flight to nowhere called weird af news. Please six four six four five zero twenty twelve. Thank you a florida. Woman named butts accused of pouring bleach on a child daytona beach. A florida woman named lovely butts which sounds like a lovely name lovely butts. You'd imagine she does great things for the community right. You know if you run into lovely but you're going to have a wonderful time ran. You see lovely butts lovely here here she comes. Hey who's coming to the party. Lovely butts well. It's gonna be a lovely party. Is it well. No because lovely butts likes to throw bleach on children's faces. Apparently she threw bleach on a child. Threatened to hit her with a gun. Lovely butts carries guns. Who'd have thought lovely butts carries bleach and guns. I would never expect that. From someone named lovely butts. And i'm sure she's got a great but by the way i don't know there's no photo this all happened. The bleach and the gun incident with a child during an argument. And i'm wondering by lovely butts would even argue with a child. Why police said that butts call them at eight pm. They arrived at the scene to find the victim upside. The home covered bleach. That's the child. Assume the little girl said she in butts got into an argument about the location of buses medication. So lovely butts poured bleach on her. Oh did you touch lovely buses medication. Well you deserve the bleach. No you don't lovely buses terrible and needs to really relax. But i don't know what lovely buses medications all about. Lovely butts bloodsport bleach on the lady. The girl causing the chemical to go into the victim's mouth and is causing her to almost lose consciousness records. Show a boy lovely buses. Get some records for sure you know. Sometimes you know you criminals and they have terrible names that they were given as a child and you're like oh they were totally made fun of david terrible. You like the last name crack or whatever this. This girl was blessed with a great name and yet it's still went all it went to shit. I mean you can't win just name your child. John mary and call it a day. The victim said at some point during the incident. She was locked outside of the house and when she tried to go back inside. Lovely butts had a gun in her hand. Threatened pistol whipper getting pistol whipped by lovely butts who the known police said. The girl got scared. She grabbed her phone. She was running outside to call someone..

PODSHIP EARTH
Arlene
"Dr Arlene Blum is a biophysical chemist and author a mountaineer and Executive Director of the Green Science Policy Institute. The Institute Scientific Research and policy work with government and business has contributed to preventing the use of harmful chemicals including flame retardants and fluorinated chemicals like pizzas in children's sleepwear furniture electronics and other products worldwide. Arlene blum received a PhD from UC Berkeley and has told at Stanford University and Wellesley College. But that's only a fraction of Alino story arlene the first American and all woman ascent of an opponent. One considered one of the world's most dangerous and difficult mountains. She Co lead the first women's team to climb. Denali completed the Great Himalayan traverse across the mountain ranges of Bhutan the Pollen India and height the length of the European Alps with her baby daughter on her back. She's the author of Ana Pana a woman's place which was named one of the top one hundred best adventure books of all time by National Geographic. She also wrote the highly acclaimed book breaking trail. A climbing. Life. In two thousand eighteen bloom was inducted into the California Hall of fame. She was chosen by the Guardian as one of the world's one hundred most inspiring women. Dr Bloom is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. And if that wasn't enough Eileen was elected to the whole of mountaineering. Excellent Hey uh keep me from getting. You remember the day where we're sitting right now. I mean we're sitting in Tilden Park on. Trail called seaview with a wonderful view of the bay. While flowers greenhills Gorgeous California. And why so many people on the trail today? Well it turns out that everyone has been ordered to stay home or go outdoors and everything's closed so there are a lot more people outdoors than usual. Which is a good thing and you walk every single day. Tell us about that routine and and how you got into it. Well I do pretty intense work and I work really hard because I have so many opportunities and I've discovered that if every day I take a walk with friends or colleagues or sometimes even the chemical industry executives with whom I do not see eye to eye. It's extremely good for my physical health. My mental health and my work. You have an incredible history of climbing of mountaineering. Have you always had a passion for climbing and mountaineering? How did that start? I was raised by incredibly cautious and conservative Orthodox Jewish grandparents in Chicago and was not allowed to do anything and I push push push to just be able to take swimming lessons and so I guess I started early with coming up with things I really wanted to do and then pushing to be able to do them. When I was a Grad student at Berkeley I heard about an expedition to Denali Mount McKinley. The Highest Mountain in North America. And I'd been climbing a lot with my friends from Reed College and had climbed higher than Denali in Peru and apply gone the trap and was told that women could go as far as base camp to help with the cooking. And when I called to say well I've climbed higher than Denali. They said. Yeah you were the only woman. You probably didn't do your share you know. Women really can't time high mountains. I wonder if a team of all women could climb high mountains and I found five other women and we went and kind to Nali ourselves. All women were the first all women's team and indeed not only. Did we climb it? But our leader had altitude sickness and became unconscious just below the summit and at that point. I was twenty five. I was the deputy leader because I'd organized and suddenly I was in charge of our Denali expedition with an unconscious person at twenty thousand feet and a big Arctic storm. Coming in and We actually made a stretcher dragged her down the mountain and it was really empowering to me. I mean I'd had a lot of negative messages in my childhood about what I couldn't couldn't do and I thought wow we got grace down from Denali Alive. We can do anything. We dream up so that was really inspiring for me to realize sick. We can all do things and we believe possible when we have to then. You just kept going though. That wasn't the end of your mountaineering. No I love being in the mountains. I love being outdoors. I love being here. I seem to like challenge. I was on a nineteen. Seventy six expedition climbed Everest. We were the second American expedition in those days. Hard to believe we have the whole mountain to ourselves and I climbed to nearly twenty five thousand feet and on the way back. I thought at that point all the world's highest mountains over eight thousand meters. That's kind of a magic height They all had been cleaned by men but no woman had ever climbed eight thousand meters and people were saying maybe women couldn't and I thought well we climbed. Denali got twenty four Everest. Let's give him a chance. So on my way back from I I applied for a permit for Anna Purna one and it was the first eight thousand meter peak ever climbed. It has the highest fatality rate. And it's now considered the hardest climb and we did not know that and so In nineteen seventy eight. I did organize an an all women's expedition and we were successful. We were the first women and indeed the first Americans to climb out of that reinforced my belief that we can all do seemingly impossible things and I'd say now is a good time for all of us to be doing seemingly impossible things because it's it's tough right now. Your experience shows me and the tough things that I've done in my life is that you can move past them that they're not insurmountable and even if they are to continue moving forward with with those challenges. I've never been above eight thousand meters. What what is it like? I mean the physicality of losing that oxygen. Do you get addicted to that. It feels like a very rarefied club of people that understand and know something that the rest of us don't well first of all it's the most beautiful place ever being above timberline with clouds on your feet the extreme beauty and peace and so it is so beautiful. But you know being here until the park is so beautiful to you. Don't have to be on top of Anna Perna and there's a huge amount of focus. You have a goal and you get a great team and everybody shares ICAL. But I'm always kind of looking for family and a climbing expedition is like a family but perhaps better family dynamics and some families have so you have a family of people all focused on a goal. And you're in a beautiful place using every bit of your physical energy but your mental energy problem solving. So it's it's super focused. Every since I became a mom didn't want to risk my life because if you know this but the chances of dying about one in ten climbing those mountains so it seriously dangerous so for me as a mom. I don't want to risk my life on the other hand what I'm doing now which is reducing harmful chemicals that are in our bodies and our products and our planet so it's got a very similar similar feeling of of getting a great team family of people who share a common goal and then persevering through avalanches and storms and Yetis. And what have you

Sean Hannity
Starbucks is opening its first store in Italy
"Starbucks is opening its first store in Italy, the country that inspired. It has customers at this. Cafe here in Rome pop in for their morning shot of Espresso standing at the counter. It's clear they're here for their quick fix. But the first ever Starbucks that opened on Thursday in Milan is betting heavily on decor. And size to draw crowds. The twenty-five thousand foot converted post office includes heated marble tops, a cocktail bar and a mammoth bronze cast to roast beans. Many italians. They'll remain skeptical. The actual coffee can hold a flame to their when it comes to syrupy concoctions like Frappuccino, don't even